The Borneo Post

‘Mortal Engines’ could lose US$100 million after a disastrous box office opening

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EVERY year brings at least one hugely budgeted movie that doesn’t just sink at the box office, but positively plunges like a flightless turkey. It’s the kind of epic miscalcula­tion that makes a studio re- evaluate its entire year.

For 2018, Universal/ Media Rights Capital’s ‘Mortal Engines’ has just weighed in as the biggest holiday bust – a monster of a miss. Or, as Exhibitor Relations analyst Jeff Bock told Variety: “This is a true Christmas disaster and a lump of coal for Universal.”

‘Mortal Engines’, co-written by Peter Jackson and Fran Walsh, grossed a paltry US$ 7.5 million in its domestic debut over the weekend, from more than 3,100 screens.

That only deepened the hole for the sci-fi fantasy spectacle, which has grossed US$ 34.8 million overseas on a reported US$ 100 million budget – meaning that the movie could lose more than US$ 100 million after marketing costs are factored in.

Universal had largely been buoyed this year by ‘Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom’, which grossed US$ 1.3 billion worldwide, and enjoyed good returns from ‘Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again’ ( US$ 394 million worldwide), ‘ The Grinch’ ( US$ 373 million) and ‘ Fifty Shades Freed’ ( US$ 371 million).

The common denominato­r among all those hit films, of course, is that they are the latest entries in existing franchises.

Yet with the woefully reviewed ‘ Mortal Engines’ ( a 44 average score on Metacritic; 28 per cent “fresh” on Rotten Tomatoes), Universal was not only banking on launching a fresh franchise.

The studio also seemed to be tempting fate with so many major decisions surroundin­g the movie. First, there was the director. Yes, Peter Jackson is attached to this project – and films he has directed, paced by his Tolkienspr­ung stories, have grossed more than US$ 6 billion worldwide. ( His biggest directing hit for Universal, ‘ King Kong’, was 13 years ago.)

But the man who helmed ‘ Mortal Engines’ is Christian Rivers, making his feature directing debut. As a veteran of Team Jackson, Rivers is betterknow­n as an effects wizard and storyboard artist who shared a visual effects Oscar for ‘ King Kong’.

Although it’s laudable to give Rivers a shot in the chair, the studio also signed off on ‘Mortal Engines’ having almost no stars ( Hugo Weaving being one of its biggest internatio­nal names) and just as limited recognitio­n in terms of source material.

The film is adapted from Philip Reeve’s YA book series. Set in a post- apocalypti­c steampunk world (and published beginning more than a decade ago, when a steampunk trend was still ascendant), the ‘Mortal Engines’ novels don’t have the name clout of a ‘Hunger Games’ or ‘ Twilight’ in the United States.

Then there’s the film’s story itself. ‘ Mortal Engines’ centres on hulking metropoli on wheels – a “city- eat- city world” – yet the marketing on Rivers’s movie did little to simplify the worldbuild­ing tale for potential filmgoers, let alone offer a clear commercial hook to intrigue audiences. The promotion was a misfire on the order of Disney’s ‘John Carter’ (2012), whose murky marketing doomed a decent movie ( US$ 284 million worldwide gross on a US$ 250 million production budget).

Lastly, Universal brazenly slotted ‘Mortal Engines’ against a highly anticipate­d animated entry in a mostly beloved franchise: ‘Spider-Man’. Sony’s ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ grossed a strong US$ 35.4 million in its domestic debut.

Even if ‘ Mortal Engines’ had managed a mediocre opening weekend in North America, it quickly would have a cinema tic universe behemoth like ‘Aquaman’ and a franchise blockbuste­r like ‘ Bumblebee’ to face this week.

Perhaps Universal was hoping to grab whatever it could at the holiday box office.

But the biggest takeaway is that the studio sought to launch a new sci- fi epic – a tall order to begin with – with so many factors working against its favour that the project appeared doomed even before it debuted.

Another sci- film this year, Paramount’s ‘Annihilati­on’, also sunk at the box office, but on “just” a US$ 40 million budget.

By comparison, given the massive financial backing of ‘ Mortal Engines’, followed by the disastrous opening, Universal needs to closely survey the wreckage of the year’s most spectacula­rly fallen kingdom. — The Washington Post.

 ??  ?? Hugo Weaving stars as Thaddeus Valentine in ‘Mortal Engines'. — Universal Pictures
Hugo Weaving stars as Thaddeus Valentine in ‘Mortal Engines'. — Universal Pictures

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